Archive for August, 2010

10th August
2010
written by Diana Ellefson

To celebrate this Travel Tuesday I am attaching a video I created on my mac for my group of friends (and me) that went on a fabulous trip to Panama in December. See the scenery, the locals and underwater dive shots.

Turn on your sound, enjoy and hopefully be taken away to Panama! :) Happy Travel Tuesday!

6th August
2010
written by Diana Ellefson

Hello dear readers and as always, thanks for checking out my site!!

I have to do some shameless self promotion now and then and well, its that time…

I am very excited to be doing some freelance writing for www.seenyc.com on one of my favorite topics of all time: New York City!

seenyc.com is a travel site specializing in New York City and is geared towards both first time and repeat visitors. The motto of the site is: Where to go…what to see…
On the site you can book flights, check out restaurants, reserve hotel rooms and… (insert my role…) read articles about what is happening in the city and what activities cannot be missed.

Even if you already live in NYC and want some ideas on things to do and see, check out the site and please let me know if you have any suggestions for article ideas!

The website will go through some cosmetic changes as it grows, but I will always point you to the articles and highlights of the site!

Thanks!
Here are some of the more recent articles:

Roam the Streets of NYC this August

Get Off the Beaten Path in NYC

Live Tennis in NYC

2nd August
2010
written by Diana Ellefson

… otherwise known as Vermont!

My husband and I took a long weekend road trip to Vermont to visit friends at their cabin. From NYC, the drive took us about six hours to our final destination of Stowe; of course my insistence that we stop along the way for photos and the occasional coffee did extend the trip some, but isn’t that what a road trip is all about?

Heading north through New York State way we traveled through the Adirondack Mountain Range. The Adirondacks are a worthy trip in itself. Thousands of streams and lakes, (including famous Lake Placid and Lake George) offer gorgeous scenery, kayak and canoe waterways, tons of hiking trails and camping sites. The scenery here reminded me of my home state of Washington — just with much shorter mountains.

After four hours of arm-out-the-window singing along to our usual road trip tunes (Bob Dylan, Modest Mouse and Neil Diamond) we opted to spend the night in Rutland, Vermont.

Rutland, like many towns in Vermont is small, but large enough to have a Main Street complete with a street fair, organic shops and great restaurants to choose from. Again I was reminded of my roots seeing the laid back, “granola” lifestyle so common to Seattle i.e.: VW bus driving–Birkenstock sporting–fleece wearing–organic food selling — ski and mountain bike bumming… and I loved it! While parts of Jersey and NY also have their “natural” sections that remind us of home at times — but Rutland was the first place we’ve visited since moving to the East Coast where I really felt like a Seattle-ite could move here and fit right in.

In Rutland we ate at the trendy yet homey Table 24. Thinking about their skillet cornbread and macaroni & cheese is a regular past time of mine when I am hungry.
The ingredients are fresh and the staff are mainly college students that may argue that the skiing brought them there more than the local college. After dinner we walked the street fair, listened to the live music and window shopped the local stores.

Rutland, VT street fair

The next day we got an early start for Stowe and made only a few short stops to take some pics and one stop at the Ben and Jerry’s Ice Cream Factory Headquarters in Waterbury. Free samples!


Diana at Ben & Jerry’s

Stowe is a popular ski town but in the summer it is a hiking/mountain biking town. Tourism is clearly the industry here, as it is in most ski areas.

While in Stowe we checked out the Summer events around town that run through mid-October including the line-up the Stowe Mountain Resort. You can take a 2,300′ ride on the Alpine Slide, get high with Bungee Trampolines or climb some rock walls. Stowe has a Gondola as well that you can ride to the highest peak in the State.


Gondola

We took advantage of the warm weather (low humidity) and hiked some of the more popular trails in the Smuggler’s Notch area. Guided tours are available for every level of hiker, but we opted to go off on our own carefully choosing the hikes that would best fit our ability (I like danger :-) )

We hiked to not very crowded scenic high points on Morse Mountain that offered panoramic views of the Champlain Valley below. We managed to also make it up Sterling Mountain–a four hour trek to the highest trout pond in the state.

The rest of the “hiking” we did was mainly around the town. Art galleries populate the roads of Stowe (one of my favorites was the Stephen Huneck Gallery showing his very popular dog drawings and sculptures) and of course the mountain touristy shops that I never seem to get tired of browsing through.


photo courtesy of www.dogmt.com


Diana at the covered bridge in town

On our last morning we stopped at the Dutch Pancake House for a very filling and delicious breakfast of blueberry pancakes, Dutch style (crepe like with all ingredients baked in, replicas of what you would find in Holland) and strong coffee. According to this site, the NY Times reviewed this as “The World’s Most Decadent Breakfast” and I’d say that review is pretty accurate.


dutch pancake

Overall, for a four day weekend, Stowe and it’s stopping points along the way was a great road trip from New York City. When I head back in the Winter I’ll be sure to update you on the happenings and you can also trust me to try out the Dutch Pancake House again, simply for the sake of research, of course. :)

travel pics

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